Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 30, Issue 3 , Pages 184-189, May 2009

Differential parental investment in families with both adopted and genetic children

Department of Anthropology, University of Utah, 270 S 1400 E Rm 102, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA

Received 30 June 2007; accepted 8 January 2008. published online 09 March 2009.

Abstract 

Stepchildren are abused, neglected and murdered at higher rates than those who live with two genetically related parents. Daly and Wilson used kin selection theory to explain this finding and labeled the phenomenon “discriminative parental solicitude.” I examined discriminative parental solicitude in American households composed of both genetic and unrelated adopted children. In these families, kin selection predicts parents should favor their genetic children over adoptees. Rather than looking at cases of abuse, neglect, homicide and other antisocial behavior, I focused on the positive investments parents made in their children as well as the outcomes of each child. The results show that parents invested more in adopted children than in genetically related ones, especially in educational and personal areas. At the same time, adoptees experienced more negative outcomes. They were more likely to have been arrested, to have been on public assistance and to require treatment for drug, alcohol or mental health issues. They also completed fewer years of schooling and were more likely to divorce. In adoptive families, it appears that “the squeaky wheel gets the grease.” Parents invest more in adoptees not because they favor them, but because they are more likely than genetic children to need the help. I conclude that discriminative parental solicitude differs in adoptive and step households because adoptive families generally result from prolonged parenting effort, not mating effort like stepfamilies.

Keywords: Adoption, Kin selection, Parental investment, Discriminative parental solicitude

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 Funding was provided by a Champe-Weakley grant via the Department of Anthropology and Geography at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

PII: S1090-5138(09)00003-8

doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2009.01.001

Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 30, Issue 3 , Pages 184-189, May 2009